Exercise and quality of life outcomes in patients with cancer.

Semin Oncol Nurs

Yale University School of Nursing, 100 Church St South, New Haven, CT 06536-0740, USA.

Published: November 2007

Objective: To review the evidence of the effects of exercise interventions in patients with cancer in each of four quality-of-life domains: physical, psychological, social, and spiritual.

Data Sources: Research articles, abstracts, literature review.

Conclusion: There is strong evidence to support positive effects of exercise on physical and psychological well-being. Exercise improves physical function, muscle strength, emotional well-being, self esteem, decreases fatigue, anxiety, and depression, and helps maintain weight. Data suggest exercise fosters social functioning and more research is needed on the relationship of exercise and spiritual well-being.

Implications For Nursing Practice: There is sufficient evidence to support exercise as an intervention to enhance a cancer patient's physical functioning and psychological well-being. Nurses should be encouraged to integrate physical activity recommendations into practice, tailored to the individual's health condition and mutual goal setting.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.soncn.2007.08.007DOI Listing

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